Dodge

July 20, 2008

Dodge Challenger: Cupholders everywhere

Challenger bourbon A shot -- no pun intended -- taken of the Challenger with the hood up. We haven't got a clue why Dodge included two dimples in this plastic panel, but we sure found a use for them. When your buddies come over to scratch-n-fart, as buddies do when you open the hood on a Hemi, there's a place to set the drinks so they don't spill. And they are perfectly sized to hold a bottle of beer or, in my case, three fingers of Booker's bourbon.*

Coincidence? Hmmmm.

Other neat thing about the Challenger: Dodge sure got the shape of this one right. Yesterday, two people asked what year the car is, and didn't believe that it was brand-new. And this morning, when my husband took it to the coffee shop in a downpour, someone pulled up beside him at the light and yelled, "You're not supposed to be driving a classic in the rain!"

*Disclaimer: JilMcIntosh.com does not condone drinking and driving. If you're going to drink, don't drive; assign a designated driver or take a taxi. Always operate your vehicle in a safe and responsible manner. Product may not be exactly as shown; Challenger is packaged by weight, not volume, and contents may have settled during shipping. Misuse may result in serious injury or death. Tag is not to be removed except by the consumer after purchase. And no animals were harmed in the making of this website.

July 18, 2008

In my driveway today: the Challenger

Challenger0001 No, it's not a press car; it's a cash-on-the-barrel, pink-slip-in-the-wallet 2008 Dodge Challenger SRT8, which arrived today. It belongs to my husband, who is absolutely thrilled with it. He's already taken the stripes off the hood; lowered suspension, new wheels and a few other changes will follow shortly. He simply can't leave anything alone.

May 22, 2008

What you say ... and what you don't ...

Dodge Caravan   In the news today: the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) crash-tested the Dodge Grand Caravan.

Here's what was on the IIHS' website: Front and side crash test ratings are GOOD but rear protection is MARGINAL.

Here's what was in the press release that Chrysler (U.S.) made available to the media: The all-new 2008 Chrysler Town & Country and Dodge Grand Caravan earned "good" ratings, the highest ratings available from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS), in both frontal offset and side crashworthiness tests.

And save for an enthusiastic quote from the minivan department's vice-president, and an assurance that Chrysler's concerned about safety, that's it.

Rear protection crash tests determine whether seat and head restraints have been properly designed to minimize the risk of neck injury in a crash. It still isn't high on a lot of automakers' lists: the Grand Caravan finished mid-pack, behind the top "Good"-rated Hyundai Entourage, Kia Sedona and Honda Odyssey, but ahead of the "Poor"-rated Toyota Sienna, Nissan Quest and Chevrolet Uplander.

But while the rating itself is important, the real story here is what Chrysler said ... or rather, what it didn't say. "Error of omission", I call it, and I think it's just as newsworthy.

May 10, 2008

Dodge, Mercedes and Mother's Day

Mothers_day_1 I feel like I wrote half the Toronto Star's automotive section today. First up, because tomorrow is Mother's Day, I did a piece on my mother's love of cars. (She's the one sitting on the '51 Ford at left.) You can find it here.

I've got a review of the Mercedes-Benz C230, the entry-level C-Class sold only in Canada, which is here.

And finally, you can find my opinions on the Dodge Caliber by clicking here.

April 15, 2008

Dodge Sprinter Review

Dodge_sprinter I have a review of the Dodge Sprinter on Canadian Driver today. You can find it here.

April 05, 2008

In today's paper ...

Dodge_dakota I have a review of the Dodge Dakota in today's Toronto Star; you can find it here.

I also turned a rant on tuner cars originally published here into a piece for the paper, which is available over here.

March 14, 2008

Sharing the road with trucks

Dodge_sprinter This Dodge Sprinter is my ride this week. Too bad there aren't any mountain roads where I could take it out and carve some corners.

What I do have around me are a couple of highways, and that's how I got this tiny creature home yesterday. If you ever had faith in most of your fellow drivers, pilot something like this for a while and then get back to me.

You'll notice that there are no side windows. That didn't stop a dozen drivers from sticking beside me with their front wheels pretty much even with my rear ones, for several kilometres at a stretch.

The brakes are good, but this is still a lot of truck to stop. I stayed in the right-hand lane (which is generally the empty one, since few people have any clue where they're supposed to drive), but even that wasn't enough for a couple of people who had to cut me off, pulling in front of me with a car length to spare, because they'd been over in the left lane and now had to get over to their exit ramps.

And you'd think something this big would be easy to spot, but no, I had to try out the horn on one cell-phone gabber who started to drift into my lane. Honey, if I can keep this thing steady between the white lines on a very windy day, surely to heaven you can do the same in a Cavalier.

I know not every tractor-trailer driver is a saint, but whenever I hear about a collision involving a big rig, my first thought is always: what stunt did the driver in the car pull?

I'd love to see all passenger-car drivers required to take a big, windowless van like this out on the highway for a couple of hours and see exactly what it's like, and then maybe they'd learn. Too many people are absolutely clueless when it comes to sharing the road with tractor-trailers. If you're not willing or able to drive properly around the trucks, stay the hell off the highway. Period.

Dodge Magnum

Dodge_magnum_2 I have a new review of the 2008 Dodge Magnum. It's been discontinued by Chrysler, but there are still enough of them available on dealer lots that it was worth taking one out for a last hurrah. You can read it here.

March 08, 2008

Chrysler's leaving California

Jeep_willys Chrysler has announced that it's closing its Pacifica Advance Product Design Center in Carlsbad, California and will consolidate the Advance Design function at its headquarters in Auburn Hills, Michigan.

Now, news from the automakers is usually made available to journalists on media-specific Web sites during business hours, with lots of quotes that we can use to beef up the story, and photos if they're available. This little tidbit came as a very low-key email, and with the same terse message posted not on Chrysler's media Web site, but on a blog that it reserves as a chattier version for the press. No quotes, no photos, not even an attribution -- just "by Editor". And it arrived late on a Friday night.

Methinks they don't want us to say too much about it.

The email said that the function will be consolidated with Michigan, but the last paragraph reads, These changes set the stage for Chrysler's future global growth efforts, which also include our intent to establish global expertise in design, engineering and sourcing through centers of excellence. These actions will help the Company meet its long-term globlization goals.

Translation: we're going to find a place that'll make the cars for cheap.

It's not new, of course. GM's been doing it for a long time -- you want to get a deer in the headlights look, go up to half the people driving Chevrolet Aveos (bonus points if they've got a "Buy Domestic" license plate frame) and ask them if they know their cars are built in Korea. Rather tellingly, GM built three new subcompact concepts and had the public vote on which one it should build. One was designed in the U.S. The winner, announced at last year's Los Angeles Auto Show, was designed in India. Hmmm. I wonder where the actual car will be built, and if that has any bearing on how that particular design was chosen.

Y'know, in the grand scheme of things, I do have a bit of a handle on how corporations work. Even if I don't like it, I understand why companies move production offshore, whether it's cars or clothes or call centres.

I just wish everyone would be honest, instead of coating it all in bafflegab. Come clean with us: it costs too much money to design a car in California, so we're closing that office and we'll be contracting the work overseas. Will the public like it? Of course not. But I think John Q. Public would have more respect for a company that tells him up front what it's doing, instead of sneaking out the back door in the middle of the night.

March 07, 2008

Just for fun ...

No reason for this, just that it's great fun. This is Corb Lund, a singer from Edmonton, Alberta, with a cool song about trucks.

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February 25, 2008

Grand Caravan review

Dodge_caravan I have a review of the 2008 Dodge Grand Caravan with the base Canada Value Package up today. You can see it here.

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  • I didn’t grow up loving cars, but when the bug finally hit, it took me by storm. I make my living writing about them, and I spend much of my spare time playing with them.

    I’m a freelance writer and a member of the Automobile Journalists of Canada. My regular outlets include new-car reviews and special-interest articles for The Toronto Star (Wheels section); new-car reviews and news reports for Canadian Driver, where I’m also the Assistant Editor; articles on antique cars for Old Autos Newspaper; and articles in the industry trade magazine Tire News.

    But I’m more than just cars: I also write about food and drink, travel, pen collecting, celebrity interviews and pets, among others. My work has appeared in such publications as Harrowsmith Country Life, Pen World, Dogs In Canada, Where New Orleans, Rural Delivery and Writer’s Journal.

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